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Sunday, June 5, 2016

The best argument to buy a home in Canada- It's A Proven Performer!

5 Reasons You Should Buy A Home In 2016


Posted: Updated:
    

REAL ESTATE

Written by Wayne Karl
Why is 2016 a good year to buy a home in Canada? Let us count the ways.

1. LOW INTEREST RATES
In its latest rate announcement on Jan. 20, the Bank of Canada held its target for the overnight rate at 0.50 per cent, citing a setback brought on by a decline in oil and commodities prices. BoC expects the economy to grow by about 1.5 per cent in 2016 and 2.5 per cent in 2017.
Some experts, such as Benjamin Tal, deputy chief economist at CIBC World Markets, expects interest rates to remain low through 2016, if not fall.
At least one lender, in Ontario, even recently introduced what it says is the lowest posted fixed mortgage rate on the market - at 1.69 per cent for a one-year term.
The BoC's next rate announcement is March 9.
2. THE UPSIDE OF DOWN PRICES
When the The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) released its latest statistics on Feb. 16, one number jumped off the page and into the headlines: 17 per cent - the rate by which the national average sale price rose on a year-over-year basis in January.
"Holy," prospective homebuyers might have thought, "how will I ever be able to buy a home if this keeps happening?"
The key thing to look for when you see such news, however, is what's happening in your market. Real estate is local, not national. You don't buy the Canadian market, or even a provincial or regional one. You buy one home in one location.
Excluding British Columbia and Ontario from CREA's January stats, the national average sale price actually declined slightly, by 0.3 per cent.
Economies and housing sectors in markets such as Calgary, Edmonton and Saskatoon are feeling the pinch of the extended slowdown in oil and gas. For existing homeowners, of course, this isn't great news; average home prices in Calgary dropped 3.05 per cent year-over-year in January, and in Saskatoon they fell 2.11 per cent.
For prospective buyers, however, this means opportunity.
Naturally, buyers might not too jazzed about getting in when prices are dropping, fearing their home's value will go down after they purchase. But look at the longer term. In Calgary, prices have increased 14.29 per cent over the last three years; in Saskatoon, 2.07 per cent.
2016-02-29-1456714515-3580277-HomePriceIndexBenchmarkPriceHP.jpg
3. THE HOT GETS HOTTER
The Toronto and Vancouver housing markets continue to roll along, hitting record sales and prices. If you live there and you're fortunate enough to be able to buy, particularly in the lowrise home category, the forecasts for 2016 are for more growth.
Again looking at the CREA's stats for January, B.C.'s Lower Mainland and the GTA contributed most to the national increase. Greater Vancouver (20.56 per cent) and the Fraser Valley (16.94 per cent) posted the largest gains, followed by Greater Toronto (10.69 per cent).
Longer-term performance for these markets is off the charts. Greater Vancouver average home prices rose 20.56 per cent in the last year, 31.58 per cent over the last three years. For the GTA, the figures are 10.69 and 27.44 per cent, respectively.
4. HISTORY IS ON YOUR SIDE
If you've heard the adage, "Don't wait to buy real estate, buy real estate and wait," but aren't sure what it means exactly, read here.
While there are no guarantees, in short, real estate in Canada is a proven performer over time.
Sure, Vancouver and Toronto have shown the most spectacular historical growth, but even unsung markets in eastern Canada have performed well over time.
5. SPRING IS AROUND THE CORNER
Spring in real estate is typically "busy season." The warmer weather and longer days generally encourage more activity in the market. Those who were thinking of selling but delayed through the winter months might now throw up that "For Sale" sign.
Those looking to buy are similarly more enthused about getting out and looking around when the weather is nicer, and when, coincidentally, listings are usually higher.
Even on the new-home front, builders often use the spring season to launch new developments, and to add incentives for any remaining inventory in existing communities.

"Bubble" Concerns Elsewhere Further Raises Home Prices In Toronto


Business Briefing
Excerpted from The Globe and Mail

Toronto home prices soar as fears of ‘the B-word’ mount in Vancouver Add to ...



Home prices surge

Here are three key numbers and two key words to ponder today:

17.5

37

1

B-word


Parabolic

The first stat represents the annual surge in the MLS price of a detached Toronto home, released today.
The second is the rise in the benchmark price for a detached house in Vancouver.
The third: Canada’s housing market compared to others, as in “We’re No. 1.”
The first key word represents “bubble,” with BMO Nesbitt Burns questioning if that’s the right description for Vancouver.
And the second is how BMO sees Vancouver prices.
All of this, of course, comes amid mounting concerns over the frothy Toronto and Vancouver real estate markets, with both Bank of Nova Scotia and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development calling this week for government intervention.
First, Toronto: Numbers released this morning showed home sales in the Toronto area climbed 10.6 per cent in May from a year earlier.
But the rise in sales pales in comparison to the gain in prices, according to the statistics from the Toronto Real Estate Board.
The cost of a detached home, as measured by the MLS home price index, surged 17.5 per cent. In the city core, the MLS price for a detached stands at almost $1.3-million. In the surrounding regions, it’s almost $900,000.
And a couple of additional stats: New listings fell 6.4 per cent, and active listings a hefty 30.4 per cent.
“While the record number of home sales through the first five months of 2016 is not necessarily surprising, it does sometimes mask the larger story in the GTA: the shortage of listings, which has resulted in strong upward pressure on home prices,” TREB president Mark McLean said in announcing the numbers today.
As The Globe and Mail’s Brent Jang reports, Vancouver’s market is also scorching.
More so than Toronto’s, in fact, which prompted BMO senior economist Robert Kavcic to point to the phenomenon we dare not name.
And he didn’t, choosing instead to question whether the city is exhibiting signs of “the B-word.” By which, of course, he meant bubble.

Numbers released yesterday showed Vancouver sales climbing 17.6 per cent, with the benchmark price soaring 29.7 per cent from a year earlier.
And then there’s the growth in a detached home: 37 per cent.
“Price growth started to go parabolic in early 2015 after oil prices went off the rails and the Bank of Canada cut rates,” Mr. Kavcic said in a research note, reminding clients that BMO warned then of surging prices in Vancouver and Toronto.
“Two past episodes in Canada that most would associate with the B-word - Calgary in 2006 and Toronto in the late ‘80s - saw price growth push through 40 per cent year over year,” he added.
“We know for sure both of those episodes ended poorly.”
According to new measures released yesterday by Bank of Nova Scotia, the rise in real home prices in Canada is tops in the world, followed by Sweden, Colombia, Ireland, Britain, Australia, Mexico, the U.S. and Germany.